From the magazine Lionel Shriver

Has deporting illegals become illegal?

Lionel Shriver Lionel Shriver
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EXPLORE THE ISSUE 14 June 2025
issue 14 June 2025

The circus around Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia – whose full name the New York Times likes to trot out as if citing an old-school English aristocrat – speaks volumes about the immigration battle roiling the US.

Our friend Kilmar is what we fuddy-duddies insist on calling an illegal immigrant. The Salvadoran crossed clandestinely into the US in 2012. As for what he’s done since, that depends on whom you ask. According to his GoFundMe page, Kilmar is a ‘husband, union worker and father of a disabled five-year-old’. Left-wing media portray ‘the Maryland man’ – a tag akin to Axel Rudakubana’s ‘a Welshman’ – as an industrious metalworker devoted to his family. His wife has rowed back on the temporary protective order she once requested, claiming she’d been over-cautious. Yet according to the Trump administration, Kilmar is a member of the notoriously violent street gang MS-13 who’s derived his primary source of income from smuggling hundreds of illegals over the southern border for several years. Choose A or B.

In 2019, Kilmar was arrested for loitering along with three other men, one a suspected MS-13 member. He was carrying marijuana, for which (of course) he wasn’t charged. From his clothing, tattoos and, more persuasively, a ‘past proven and reliable’ confidential source who verified he was an active gang member using the moniker ‘Chele’, police adjudged that Kilmar was a gangbanger, for which (of course) he wasn’t charged. He was turned over to Immigration and Customs Enforcement – whose acronym, ICE, reinforces its rep as cold-hearted – which moved to deport him. Kilmar (of course) contested his removal.

The immigration judge hearing Kilmar’s case concurred that the defendant was indeed a gang member and deportable; the Salvadoran (of course) appealed the decision, which nevertheless was upheld.

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